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Psychology and Law

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Psychology and Law Expert testimony Forensic Assessment Child custody disputes Insanity defense Criminal Profiling Predicting Dangerousness Outline of week s topics ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychology and Law


1
Psychology and Law
  • Expert testimony
  • Forensic Assessment
  • Child custody disputes
  • Insanity defense
  • Criminal Profiling
  • Predicting Dangerousness

2
Outline of weeks topics
  • Insanity defense
  • History of Legal provisions
  • Cases Dahmer, Menendez, Hinckley
  • Non Pathological criminal incapacity (SA)
  • History of Legal provisions
  • Cases Chretien, Moses
  • Expert Testimony
  • Problems and considerations de Kock and the
    TRC.
  • Socially responsible expert testimony

3
Law vs. Psychology
  • Law
  • Deals in Absolutes
  • Concerned with the particular
  • Concepts of self control, responsibility,
    morality
  • Free Will
  • Search for justice
  • Protection of society
  • Psychology
  • Deals in Relative terms
  • Interested in the general, extrapolation
  • Discourse of Illness/ Medical model
  • Determinism Biopsychosocial causality
  • Search for facts re. Human behaviour.
  • Protecting the individual

4
Insanity Defense
  • Jeffrey Dahmer
  • Crime
  • Background
  • Expert Testimony
  • Diagnosis?

5
Insanity Defense
  • History
  • McNaghten 1843
  • Persecution complex ? attempt to kill PM Sir
    Robert Peel
  • Accidentally shoots secretary
  • Found NGRI
  • Disposition Lunatic asylum 22 years
  • McNaghten rules
  • The accused must suffer from a disease of the
    mind of such severity that the accused was
    incapable either of knowing the act was wrong or
    of understanding the nature of the act.
  • Purely cognitive test
  • Fairly strict not enough to have delusion
    must be relevant to act. E.g. delusion of rumours
    should not ? murder

6
Insanity defense History continued.
  • Historically the NGRI plea only used to evade the
    death sentence
  • Incarceration in prison largely preferable to
    psychiatric commitment
  • Conditions
  • Prospects for release
  • 1954 Bazelon
  • Concern that disproportionate representation of
    socially deprived in Criminal justice system.
  • Desire for rehabilitation in good mental
    institutions

7
ALI test 1955
  • Adds to McNaghtens test a volitional component
  • A person is not responsible for criminal conduct
    if at the time of such conduct as a result of
    mental disease or defect he lacks substantial
    capacity either to appreciate the wrongfulness of
    his conduct or to conform his conduct to the
    requirement of law.
  • Volition ability to control self
  • Most controversial aspect of insanity defense

8
Jeffrey Dahmer
  • Cannibalistic killings
  • Uncontrollable urge to have sex with
    unconscious victims
  • 17 victims drugged, lobotomized, dissected
  • No hallucinations or delusions
  • Almost caught when one boy tried to escape
  • Found guilty ? 936 years in prison without
    parole. Why did NGRI defense not succeed?

9
Disorders of legal significance
  • Need to know how the mental illness concerned
    affected either cognition or volition
  • 89 of successful pleas either schizophrenic or
    mentally retarded
  • Schizophrenia
  • Loss of integrated functioning
  • Paranoia/delusional thinking
  • Hallucinations

10
Disorders of legal significance continued
  • Bipolar
  • Can have mania, psychotic features
  • MPD/DID
  • A subtype of PTSD
  • Western disorder, possession states?
  • I find you all guilty!
  • PTSD

11
Impulse Control Disorders
  • What are they?
  • Inability to resist urge ? tension ? act ?
    release
  • Examples
  • Pathological gambling
  • Kleptomania
  • Paraphilias
  • Homosexual Panic! DSMI
  • Policeman at elbow
  • Disorders of self control or disorders of intent?

12
Syndrome evidence
  • Battered spouse syndrome
  • Battered Child syndrome Menendez
  • Lyle (age 25) and Erik Menendez (age 23)
  • Killed parents with shotgun while watching TV
  • 911 call good actors
  • After murder shopping spree
  • Claimed years of emotional sexual abuse
  • Deadlocked juries manslaughter vs. murder.
  • Were these murders result of irresistible
    impulse?

13
Psychopathy
  • Unsocialised Individuals
  • DSM criteria
  • Circular definition
  • Excluded specifically in ALI
  • South African provision

14
Diagnostic vs. Legal concepts
  • Changes in diagnostic categories e.g..
    Homosexuality
  • Many different diagnostic systems DSM, ICD10
  • Some disorders have higher scientific status than
    others
  • ? Battle of expert witnesses
  • Consequences of disorder ? seek help e.g. alc.
    abuse, gambling ? gamblers anonymous vs.
    stealing.
  • Relevance of the mental illness to act disease
    must have bearing on either volition or
    cognition.
  • DSM IV now contains warning re. use outside
    clinical setting.

15
Burden of proof
  • On the accused
  • Used to be on state until Hinckley
  • Hinkley
  • Background
  • Crime
  • Expert Testimony
  • Verdict
  • Reasons for this verdict?

16
Insanity defense concluded
  • Public tends to hysteria butmostly due to high
    profile cases e.g. Menendez
  • Reality Very few successful NGRI pleas
  • lt 1 attempt plea, of these lt 25 successful
  • Time imprisoned about the same as prison
    offenders
  • Recidivism less than prison offenders
  • More serious the crime, the more difficult to
    plead successfully
  • Mental institution periodic reviews of detainee
    to balance individual rights/public safety
  • Is the defense objective in practice?

17
References
  • Reznek, L. (1997). Evil or Ill justifying the
    insanity defense. London Routledge.
  • Slovenko, R. (1995). Psychiatry and Criminal
    Culpability. New York John Wiley Sons
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